This morning 2 years ago

This morning 2 years ago I was induced and faced the emotional and physical pain of giving birth to my beautiful twin girls Chloe and Grace.

I was heartbroken, terrified and was still praying for a miracle that the doctors had been wrong when they had told me just a few days before that they could find no heart beats. People say I was brave but I only did what any mother would do.

Tomorrow will be their birthday. How has it been 2 years? It marks the day we met them but every day is just the same.

We live our lives in what feels like a parallel world where our babies didn’t live but very aware of how our lives could have been. I would have been posting sweet photos of them most likely and dressing them in butterfly themed dresses.

I recently bought the soft toy bunnies that I knew they would love. They don’t get to cuddle the bunnies but I certainly do and think of them when I do. My life may not have Chloe and Grace in it but my heart is still full of love for them. Their lives mattered and still matter today and for always ๐Ÿ’—๐Ÿ’—

Mothering them from afar

It’s not easy living the life of a mother without my babies here to physically be a mother to. Sending so much love to all the mothers out there today who remain childless or who having children look across the room and there should be another child there but they died too soon. It doesnโ€™t matter how long you carried your baby, whether you gave birth to them, saw them or felt them kick. For those who only knew of a cluster of cells, that was your baby and you are still their mother!!๐ŸŒธ

Though each day my heart aches as I know Chloe and Grace are not here and neither are the 3 embryos we once had, I am their mother still …My life so often feels empty without them yet it also feels full because of my love for them.

My mother heart aches to see and hold my two girls again. I only got to hold them after they were born sleeping. I am their mother and I mother them from afar just by the way I live my life and the choices I now make. I try to be everything that I can be and aim to be the best I can be. To love others and care for others as a mother does which is a true gift to embrace. To enourage and see the good in others. To see the beauty in life as I think of my two beautiful girls who would now be full of giggles at 17 months. I feel broken and saddened at their absence yet through the cracks comes strength and joy and hope. I cherish life and continue to be reminded of their lives in the sweet pinks of flowers and when I hear the sounds of song birds in the trees, when I see little girls playing or chatting to their mummies or daddies. I am so happy to be their Mum today and always. ๐Ÿ’–๐Ÿ’– xxxx

This entry was posted on March 11, 2018. 1 Comment

Oh Septemberย 

Not sure how I am managing to keep going right now. To keep a smiling face at work, to not fall apart when I see others with their children, to keep strong! 

Being in the month of September is hard! 

This time last year we were excited to meet our babies with only weeks to go and then we would lose that dream and our worlds fell apart. 

My birthday on 7th last year I had pelvic pain but was elated to be expecting twins and turning 40 was somehow ok as I knew we were finally going to have a family. This month on my birthday at 41 I was met with mixed emotions and uncertainty about my future.

I feel apprehensive about the days to come that mark a year on especially that devastating day we found out on 24th and 3 days later their birthday on 27th. 

No idea how I will feel but I doubt it will feel any different to any other day this year where my heart has ached for them. 

Thankfully we have booked time away as a couple so we can just be, just feel how we need to feel, cry, shout, whatever…

The journey has been and is tough. Very few can know what it feels like and I pray noone has to.  

Yet this September I also feel blessed by friends, family and colleagues who have been so supportive this past year, especially those who check in on me, who let me be myself, who hold me when there are no words, who have helped me find some joy amongst my grief, who have encouraged me and remained beside me.

Oh pregnant lady on the train

Pregnancy

Oh pregnant lady on the train
Do you truly know what you have?
Do you realise in this moment the life you carry? Or take this precious gift for granted?

Oh pregnant lady on the train
Do you already consider yourself a mother?
Do you treasure each progressing month? Or do you wish the time to fly by?

Oh pregnant lady on the train
Do you look at your bump with a smile?
Do you enjoy that your baby is growing? Or moan when you are tired or ache?

Oh pregnant lady on the train
Do you live with thankfulness each day?
Do you speak about your baby with positivity? Or harbour doubts or hidden regrets?

Oh pregnant lady on the train
So many donโ€™t get to where you have right now
Love your little one and protect them no matter how tiny they are. Please cherish each moment of who they are now.

 

Always their Fatherย 

When I look at you I don’t just see you as my dear loving husband but the amazing Father of our two beautiful girls. Chloe Beatrice Emiola and Grace Suzanne Olufemi are your babies and you will always be their Daddy. They may not be here for you to hold but they are still very much at the centre of our lives, our thoughts, our memories, our conversations each day. You loved them from the moment I shouted down the stairs last May those words ‘I’m pregnant’ and I know you will love them every day of your life. They are each a little bit of you and me, made from the love we share and I often find myself thinking about them when I look at the cute shape of your nose which they inherited from you. 

You fathered and still father them in so many ways. Here are just a few to mention.  

You spoke to them and prayed over them each day throughout my pregnancy,  with excitement you gazed upon them and listened to their heart beats every two weeks at the scans. You took photos of my growing bump with amazement, you told me your hopes and dreams for them and our future years together as a family. 

The day our babies hearts stopped beating your heart broke too and you wept over them with devastation. Yet you remained as a rock to me their mother. 

I will never forget the look on your face when you first saw Chloe on 27th September, your firstborn and then Grace over an hour later. Amidst your grief was a look of pure love as you gazed upon your daughters as any proud dad would upon their birth. You carefully cut their cords and then held them close and couldn’t stop marvelling at how wonderful they were.  

You had to say goodbye to our girls and the life that was meant to be with them and no father should ever have to carry the coffin of their daughters yet you did with such braveness to honour them. 

You are their father in the way you talk about them to others and keep their memory alive. Your love for them overflows in the things you do and say. You encourage us all with your faith and strength. Your girls will always be in your heart my lovely husband. Thank you for being their father and for always being you! I love you!

Heart full, mind full

My mind is full of my girls today and as I think about them my heart feels full too. I wrote down lots of words that came to mind and used an on line word-cloud maker to express in these moments what my heart may look like. Some words are bigger than others as they were most prominent in my thoughts. The mix of colours I chose were also a reflection of how I feel and how I wanted to portray the words and my babies. Some words are positive and some negative which resembles this journey I am on too and how my mind flitters from one thought to another. 

Bitter sweet bump

Getting ready for work this morning I tried on two pairs of smart trousers in preparation for an important meeting but couldnt do the zip up on either of them. Usually at work I wear stretchy jeans or jeggings and loose jumpers to cover up and today after finally squeezing into the third pair I am left very aware of my oversized tummy from when I was pregnant. 

It is not that this is my first time noticing my protruding belly, in fact every day I am conscious of it particularly when showering or dressing in front of the mirror but to avoid getting carried away somewhere in my thoughts I will try to think about something else.

Recently though and on a day like today my tummy somehow kept my gaze for longer and I feel like I want to exercise and watch what I eat as I don’t want to look fat or be unhealthy. I also feel insecure at times when I don’t feel attractive in my clothes. This situation has not been helped by the many evenings of comfort eating through times of grief and when I grab yet another chocolate bar to help ease the pain.

My husband thankfully accepts me and tells me that he loves me just as I am (I haven’t been teeny tiny slim anyway since knowing him and he prefers a curvy figure which has always helped my self esteem) but I would want to do this for myself. 

However this urge to lose the pregnancy flab has not been my usual story these last few months so as I gaze down at my protuding belly bump I now find myself in a conflict of emotions.

For me, having a growing bump during pregnancy had been one of the most amazing experiences of my life. I had yearned for the day I would find out I was pregnant and when we finally conceived I couldn’t wait to see how my tummy would expand. As Chloe and Grace developed I was so excited to see a bit of a bump fairly early on and being twins the bump grew quickly. I was so proud of my bump and to be carrying my babies. I was disappointed a few times when people didn’t notice this on the tube to work and offer their seat but then I was super happy when they started to. 

I didn’t look in the mirror and wince at my figure or worry when I didn’t fit into my clothes. I loved wearing maternity wear that accentuated and celebrated my new curvylicious figure. This was what I had dreamt of for a long time. It was my time to flourish and blossom as a mum to be and my family and friends loved it too to see me so happy. 

Each week my husband would take a photo of me with my bump at various angles and in the same top so that I could later look back and see my bump progress. I would send these photos each time to my mum, dad and sister who were so excited to soon meet their first grandchildren and nieces.  I had planned to make a time lapse video once I gave birth and one day show my girls photos of when they were in mummy’s tummy. 

For the one time in my life I could be just as I was, I didn’t care about the extra pounds I put on or the shape I was becoming. I loved how I looked. This was who I was destined to be. 

Though I felt sick for at least 14 weeks, suffered heartburn, had uncomfortable stretchy pulls and pelvic pain to the point I struggled to walk, I loved my big growing bump.  My bump held my future family.

I knew that in November when my babies were meant to be born at 32 weeks by ceasarian section any remaining pregnancy bump would eventually go. I had learnt that breast feeding could help to lose weight. In my case perhaps initially I would breast pump so I could feed my babies through tubes for the first few weeks in neonatal care until they were strong enough to feed properly. Perhaps I would get fitter by walking lots in the park with them in the double buggy with other mums or just the busyness of being a twin mum would help me get back in shape. 

Yet it wouldn’t matter to me even if I ended up bottlefeeding or if it took some time to lose the weight, as having some post pregnancy flab was to be expected. I would have looked upon my two longed for girls and known it was worth it all just to have them alive in my life.

Of course I have no idea if any of this would have happened like this since these were mere dreams and I will not get to see them in reality.

When Chloe and Grace were stillborn in September not only was my heart grieving their loss and dealing with the trauma of giving birth to lifeless babies whose cry we wouldn’t hear, but my body continued through the usual physical motions as if my babies were still alive. Taking tablets to dry up my milk the day of their birth when I should have been nourishing my girls was the most tragic and unnatural thing to do and went against every maternal instinct I had. Yet I knew it would have been even more devastating to have my milk come through without my babies.

When we said goodbye to our beautiful daughters just before the midwives took them to the cold room of the hospital to await their funeral, my bump was still visible. It was not as pronounced as it had been carrying twins at 24 weeks (a bit like a 30 week single baby), but it was still a part of me and my journey with my babies that I dearly wanted to hold onto.

My uterus had to contract back to normal size so the midwife would visit to check I was healing properly and I bled heavily on and off for nearly 6 weeks. All sorts of things were happening to my body that were new to me as this was my first time. I was told that all of this was to be expected after birth but it was a gut wrenching reality to face with no babies to hold. 

At first I could not look at myself in the mirror without crying in despair as I realised my big bump was gone and that I would have to learn to accept the brutal truth that I was childless. Yet although over time my tummy reduced in size I still had a tiny bump.

My body yearned to hold Chloe and Grace close for weeks after. Sometimes I would hold a cushion and rock when I cried over them. I even held their tiny box of ashes next to my tummy the day we took them home after the funeral as that would be the closest I would get to carrying them again.  

I had gotten so used to protecting my large twin filled bump that for months after, I automatically went to pull my now much smaller tummy away from the kettle as I poured hot water into a cup in case it splashed and hurt them.

To look down then today at my little bump and to feel too tight in my smart trousers is so bitter sweet. For the last few months it has been a visible reminder of the heartache I have been through and the waves of grief that have followed. Yet at times it has been a comfort and is now the only physical sign on my body to show that my babies existed. 

I know I won’t ever forget them. They and the memories of those many joyous days carrying them will stay with me always. I also have their photos and their footprints to look at and the beautiful ring of their hearts entwined on my finger.

Yet to lose this bump I feel I will lose another little part of them.

So I go about my day and look forward to getting back into my loose trousers. I know I will need to decide soon on starting that exercise regime and cutting back on the chocolate but for now I hold my tiny bump that remains and think upon my two sweet girls. 

๐Ÿ’—๐Ÿ’— xx

Wonderfully made

He made your whole being. Oh tiny cluster of cells that came to be during this week in April one year ago. Without us even being aware, our Father in heaven was creating you. You were made from love and we already loved you even before we knew you existed. God is love and he loved you. In the twinkling of an eye you already had all the genes that would decide how you would look and who you would become. You were planned and wanted. Mummy and daddy never gave up hope that you would one day be conceived. You are our miracle. 

He formed each of you (knitted together) in mummy’s body. Being momo twins the splitting of the zygote was far later than in other twins so much so that you ended up in the same amniotic sac and had the same placenta. I prayed you would be twins. God chose me to carry such special baby girls. He created you and you soon grew in mummy’s tummy. You are each a bit of mummy and a bit of daddy. 

We praise God because he made you in an amazing and wonderful way. Being so unique and rare we had the privaledge of seeing you more than usual. Even inside mummy’s tummy you started to display different movements and kicks. You were so tiny and looked identical in shape yet we soon discovered you were already developing your own individual personalities. You loved to dance and being so close to each other you could hug each other and had the comfort of one another as sisters. You were never alone. When we met you oh how beautiful you were. Chloe you had many of daddy’s features and Grace you were more like mummy but you both were made in the image of God. 

What God has done is wonderful. Though we miss you and grieve the loss of not having you with us and not seeing our dreams fulfilled of watching you grow up here on earth, we trust that God is good and you are now in heaven with him. What he did to give you to us, to love and cherish, even for such a short while, leaves our hearts full to overflowing. Your lives have made such an impact on our lives and the lives of others. He made you to always be our firstborn daughters. This is wonderful and I know this very well.

He saw your bones being formed as you took shape in mummy’s body. Oh how I will never forget those images of seeing your bones in intricate detail on the scans especially at 20 weeks when we were taken on a skeletal journey looking at each of you to check you were ok anatomically. How amazing God had made you. You were perfect in every way. We could see your spine, your ribs, your skull, each finger each toe. It was just as though God was revealing just a glimpse of how he could see you. When he put you there together in the secret place he saw your bodies as they were formed.

All your days God planned for you were written in his book before any of them came to be.  God had a plan and a purpose for each of you and he also had a plan and purpose for mummy and daddy when he made you. He is outside of our time yet he cares about the times we felt excitement about being your parents and the many times since you left when we weep for you. Your names Chloe and Grace are in his book and are etched on his and our hearts. We take comfort to know you are with our maker. The days you were with us even before you had a chance to breathe or open your eyes and before this world would acknowledge you as being ‘viable’ were special to us and each one was meant to be. Even if we had known these days would come to an end at 24 weeks to the day we would not have changed a thing and would do it all again. Being pregnant and carrying you is my greatest memory of this life time. I will never forget these days and I will never stop loving you both. 

Until we meet again, Mummy xx ๐Ÿ’—๐Ÿ’—

 Based on Psalm 139 

This entry was posted on April 20, 2017. 2 Comments

My babies matter as much as the babies you can see

Please talk to me about my babies. You may not see me holding them or see photos of them on social media but they are very much here in my heart. Months have passed and seasons have changed. Perhaps your life has moved on, but my precious little babies still remain a big part of me and my life every day. I will never get over this or move on but I will move forward on a different journey.

Please mention my babies by name, it means so much when you acknowledge who they are. Though they did not get to breathe even a breath of the air we breathe they are still my children. We had planned their names for years. These are the children we had hoped and prayed for all our marriage.

Please remember their birthday as you would if they were still here. I will always know how old they would have been at each coming year and the milestones they would have achieved.

They can’t be replaced by me just ‘having another baby’. There will always be a huge void in our lives where they were meant to be. They will always be my first. And besides our twins were our miracles, not every woman can easily conceive.

You may not realise it but saying words like ‘twin’, ‘birth’, ‘pregnancy’ or ‘baby’ around me with no prior warning or sensitivity can cause a seismic wave in my heart. Although I may look happy and content on the outside, on the inside yes there are fragments of happiness but amidst a field of broken dreams and I have yet to recover from a major trauma.

Yes it pains me to see that you are expecting, but that’s because you are a reminder of who I was when I had the privaledge of carrying my babies. I have vivid memories of feeling my twins kick and move and on the scans every two weeks they would cuddle and kiss. I could see them alive and well, they were perfectly formed. Yet please know that I rejoice that you are going through this amazing journey and will soon meet your baby. You and I have a connection and I understand some of those worries that you may have. Don’t forget too that I know what it is like to go through weeks of sickness, to suffer heartburn, pelvic pain and later to ride the storms of labour contractions.

I love that you now have a baby to take home from the hospital, please celebrate them, shout from the rooftops of the joy they bring, I would have and dreamt of the day I would do the same!  I love that your little one is growing up. Do tell of those cute things they do and say. Yet please don’t forget that I am a mother too.The love I feel for my babies is just the same as the love you feel for yours. The difference is I don’t get to show them. I love them and mother them from afar. Oh how I long for them and miss them each day. I breathe the memories of their short lives each day and I can’t simply dettach from the future vision I had built up of my life that was to be, with them and holding them.

I know for some, children can be hard to cope with and believe me I probably would be moaning by now about the stresses of coping with twins, but please do think before you tell me of your ‘bad’ day with the kids. Oh what I would give to have just one of those days or even an hour with my babies alive again.

Please don’t assume how I may feel. Please don’t pass me by if you don’t know what to say.  I need you and I am still me. Yes these times are hard for me but I am surviving through. Hopefully I will be a stronger me. I cling to hope and my heart is bursting with love.

Let me share with you about my babies. With my streams of tears there also comes a fountain of thankfulness and pure joy at having been part of their lives.

Please don’t forget them. My babies matter as much as the babies you can see. Especially to me. ๐Ÿ’—๐Ÿ’—